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Wet Dreams and False Images is a Sundance award-winning documentary film that uses humor to raise serious concerns about the marketplace of commercial illusion and unrealizable standards of physical perfection.
Dee-Dee, a Brooklyn barber covers his wall with magazine pin-ups of women. He wishes that real women could look more like the images on "his wall of beauty." However, when Dee-Dee is introduced to the art of photo-retouching, his perceptions of beauty are called into question.
AWARDS Jury Award, Short Subject, The 2004 Sundance Online Film Festival Grand Prize, Kodak Film Award, The Chicks with Flicks Film Festival The Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) Award -- 2005 top video for young adults Best Use of Technology, The Urban Literary Film Festival Audience Award, The Chlotrudis Short Film Festival Luna Fest -- Pick*-- 5th Anniversary Screening Series
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"Epstein's quirky, quietly radical film shows consciousnesses being raised right on camera, as Dee Dee learns that "my man had a lot of wet dreams, to a lot of false images". A riveting examination of how retouching has enforced an utterly unrealizable standard of female beauty, even at street level." Kate Stables THE GUARDIAN NEWSPAPER
"Revealing, sensitive, and yes, funny, WET DREAMS AND FALSE IMAGES is a wonderful deconstruction of the construction of desire. I strongly recommend it as a teaching tool for academic as well as community environments." Stephen Duncombe, Professor of Media and Cultural Studies New York University
“In a barbershop in Brooklyn, Dee-Dee admiringly looks at his collection of celebrity women, tacked up on the wall, in all their smooth, silky glory. In his opinion, these are women who are absolutely perfect. They’ve got no flaws, and there’s nothing about them that can be construed as such. In essence, they are goddesses. That’s, of course, until director Jesse Epstein comes along. There’s no intention to break this guy’s love for these women, but just to show him how these women actually become what they are. And so begins an absorbing twelve minutes, where we not only hear from Dee-Dee, as well as other barbers, but also a computer airbrush and touch-up artist, where they reveal how they do what they do. As one of Dee-Dee’s co-workers puts it, “He’s been having wet dreams to false images.” It’s a brief documentary that brings new light to exactly how sex sells when it comes to photography, and how real women out there might also be dreaming to false images when they go on this diet and that diet to get the bodies that those women seemingly possess. “Wet Dreams” keeps it all honest and while it may not have the power to stop people from buying magazines out there like Maxim, that’s not its purpose. Its purpose is to educate on a matter like this and that has been accomplished exceedingly well. Film Threat Rory L. Aronsky 4 and 1/2 Stars
Jesse Epstein Jesse lives in Brooklyn. Her films WET DREAMS AND FALSE IMAGES received a Short Subject Jury Award at The Sundance Film Festival, THE GUARANTEE received Best Short Film at Newport International Film Festival, and 34x25x36 had National PBS Broadcast on P.O.V. All three films are being distributed through New Day Films. Jesse was selected for of “25 New Faces of Independent Film” by filmmaker magazine. She is also the editor of the Shooting People, Inc. NY Filmmaker’s Network.
Jesse Epstein, received an MA in documentary film and gender studies from NYU. She has directed and produced documentary projects both nationally and internationally. Her Public Service Announcement about body image has been shown in the Media That Matters Film Festival in conjunction with the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival and on the Oxygen Media Channel. She is also the founder of a youth video program in Manhattan's Lower East Side, and an instructor for Reel Stories: Sundance's youth documentary lab. Jesse recently received a grant from the Chicken and Egg Fund and the Fledgling Fund to produce a fourth segment of "Body Typed".
Jesse grew up in Boston, Mass. She received an MA in documentary film from NYU. Jesse was recently selected for "25 New Faces of Independent Film" by Filmmaker Magazine. For three years she instructed Reel Stories: Sundance's Youth Documentary Workshop. With a grant from Chicken & Egg Pictures, Wet Dreams and False Images, and The Guarantee, are being expanded into a one-hour film about body image and media. To see samples of her films, visit http://www.newday.com/filmmakers/Jesse_Epstein.html.
34x25x36
Part 3) BODY TYPED: 34 x 25 x 36 is the third installment in a trilogy of films (including "The Guarantee" and the Sundance award-winning "Wet Dreams and False Images") examining issues of body image from quirky and revealing angles. This time, we are t
Subject: Women's Studies/Men's Studies
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